There are excerpts from Arlington Police Departmentís log from Tuesday, April 29 to†Tuesday, May 6,†2014. The log is public record and available for review. All persons are presumed innocent unless found guilty in a court of law.Tuesday, April 29At 2:39 p.m. police responded to a Mass. Ave. store for a report of shoplifting, where the manager presented a juvenile male, who had lifted a container of chocolate milk. The boy told police that he had taken drinks from the store on several other occasions. His father was called to the scene and the boy was told he could no longer come to the store. He will referred to the court diversion program and the school resource officer will follow up with him.At 3:44 p.m. police responded to a report of a motor vehicle accident at Mass. Ave. and Avon Place, where they found two cars had collided. A car traveling southbound on Avon Place did not stop for a red traffic light at the intersection, and struck a parked U.S. Postal Service truck. The driver was cited for a red light violation.At 7:14 p.m. police responded to a Hibbert Street home, where a man told them he had come home to find several striations on his front door and a cracked pane of glass at a basement window. No entry was gained and the man did not have a suspect in mind.At 7:53 p.m. police responded to a report of a harassment at a Lake Street home, where a woman told them she believed she was receiving spam emails from an ex-boyfriend, and thought she had seen suspicious vehicles and people near her home and her workplace.Wednesday, April 30At 10:02 a.m. police responded to a report of suspicious telephone call at a Summer Street home, where a resident told them he had received a phone call telling him he had won the Readerís Digest contest and he believed it was a scam.At 10:46 a.m. police responded to a shoplifting report at a Mass. Ave. store, where the store manager reported that he had detained a juvenile male who he had seen taking a pair of Phillips earbud headphones. The boy told them he had broken his brotherís headphones and did not have the money to replace them, so he taken a pair. The boyís father was called to the scene, he was referred to the court diversion program and the school resource officer will follow up with the student.At 12:40 p.m. police responded to a report of a property damage accident on Park Avenue, where a motorist told them he had left his car parked on the street and when he returned his car had been sideswiped, damaging the driverís side mirror. A witness told him that it had been struck by a white construction vehicle that was a from a Woburn business. It remains under investigation.At 6:34 p.m. police were on patrol when they were flagged down at Lake and Hardy streets by a Margaret Street resident who told them he had been looking out of a window at the back of his home, which abuts the Minuteman Bikeway, when he saw a man staring back at him from the Bikeway. He went to confront the man, but he was gone when he went outside. Police urged him to call the department if he sees anything else.Thursday, May 1At 9:30 a.m., a real estate agent came to the police station to report that money put in escrow for a rental property, had been scammed by someone claiming to be the renterís daughter. The bank had allowed three withdrawals of $5,000, $2.000 and $2,200. It remains under investigation.At 10:30 a.m. police received a report at the police station about unauthorized charges made on a residentís credit card in New York State for a total of about $1,500. He closed the account.At 7 p.m. police received a report at the police station of a lost iPhone, which the owner temporarily tracked to a restaurant on Mass. Ave. When she went to the restaurant, it had been turned off. She estimated that it was worth $600.Friday, May 2At 7:20 a.m. police responded to a motor vehicle break-in on Sunnyside Avenue, where a resident told them her car had been entered, but nothing was missing. The car was unlocked.At 1 p.m. police received a report of annoying phone calls from a resident who said he was receiving harassing phone calls from a person to whom he had sold a car. The person wasnít happy, andAt 2:20 p.m. police responded to a report of a possible break-in on Mass. Ave., where a window at a business was damaged. No entry was made and the interior glass was not broken.Saturday, May 3At 2 p.m. police responded to a residential alarm at a Lake Street address and it was determined to be a faulty alar.m.Sunday, May 4At 2:14 a.m. police officers saw a car operating without its headlights on in a parking lot on Mass. Ave. and went over to the car. The men in the car seemed to be making unusual movements as if they were trying to conceal something. They were asked to get out of the car, and both men had a good amount of money on them in differing denominations. The driver was cited for driving after license revocation and driving without using headlights. The car was towed.At 9:06 a.m. police responded to a report of a fire at an Old Colony Lane address, where they found a charred chair in the street. A woman reported she had been smoking a cigarette, thought she had put it out in the ashtray but it had actually fallen into the chair and set it on fire. She pulled the chair out into the street so she could be sure it was out.At 4:21 p.m. a man came to the police station and gave them a 9 mm handgun and ammunition he found while cleaning out a relativeís home.At 4:32 p.m. a woman came to the police station and said a man who had responded to her online ad to rent a room in her home, was continuing to harass her by phone. She had already rented the room, but he continued to contact her saying she sounded sexy. She was advised to have her cellphone carrier block the number.At 5:46 p.m. police responded to a report of a domestic dispute, which turned out to be on the Minuteman Bikeway. They found a man and woman who said they had had a verbal argument over the man going to a strip club. During the argument he punched a nearby wooden wall. There was no physical contact between the two of them.Monday, May 5At 12:48 p.m. police received a report that a man had dropped off an elderly relativeís car to a gas station on Mass. Ave. in early March to be repaired or to be sold if there was a customer interested in buying it. The man said the car was no longer at the gas station. Police questioned the gas station owner who said a customer asked to test drive the week it arrived at the gas station, but she never returned it. Police will file a complaint for larceny over $250 by false pretences against her.At 12:30 p.m. police received a report from a Mass. Ave. resident that a pair of sneakers he had bought online from Macyís were stolen from his hallway.At 3:37 p.m. police responded to a report of landlord-tenant issue at Summer Street, where police spoke to the landlord who said the boyfriend of a new tenant had come around threatening him, but left just before police got there. The day before, the tenant had reported to police that she had changed the locks on her apartment and put a deadbolt on the door after she believed her landlord was entering her apartment without her permission. She also told them she believed that he had rented to her only to have a relationship with her, and she was not interested. When she came home, she found two deadbolts on her apartment door, which the landlord had supposedly installed. She agreed to stay somewhere else for the night and to pursue a resolution in court.At 9:41 p.m., a mother contacted police for a copy of a police report describing the assault and battery on her daughter at Arlington High School earlier in the day. She said another student struck her daughter, and the other student had been suspended for three days. The dispute was allegedly over one girl posting a photo of the other girl and her friends on Twitter. The school resource officer is following up on the incident.Tuesday, May 6At 11:04 a.m. police received a report from a Williams Street resident about a phone scam. The caller identified himself as "Sammy Davis" from One Lucky Winner Sweepstakes, and told the resident he was in the running to win $5.5 million or a brand new car, but he would have to wire $1,200 through Western Union "to remain in the running." The man hung up and reported it to police.At 11:50 a.m., police responded to a Falmouth Road home, where a man had found a pearl-handled Smith & Wesson handgun and a shotgun in his home and wanted to get rid of them safely. Police took possession of the guns and will have them destroyed.At 1:57 p.m. police were involved with a 10-day quarantine for a dog on Garden Street. No other information was available.At 5:08 p.m. police received a report about a past larceny, where a man told them that he had received a phone call regarding a National Grid debt he supposedly owed. It was for a Leominster address, where he had never lived. The outstanding bill was for $21.37. He was given the departmentís identity theft package.At 5:25 p.m., police responded to a crash on Mass. Ave., where they found a bicyclist in the road. A motorist told them he was parked westbound on Mass. Ave., opened his driverís door and the bicyclist, also headed west on Mass. Ave., crashed into it and was launched into the street. The bicyclist had a minor abrasion on his elbow but refused transportation to a local hospital. The driver was cited for failing to use care.